PCIe slot is 3.0 x16 physical / x8 electrical.Now, back to this device: is this a Gen 3 x8 or better PCIe slot?
PCIe slot is 3.0 x16 physical / x8 electrical.Now, back to this device: is this a Gen 3 x8 or better PCIe slot?
Passthrough of the iGPU is largely not needed thanks to virtio-gl. In fact, it's better since you can give it to every VM on the host.I'd be really interested to know if anyone has managed to get iGPU passthrough working with the onboard XE gfx in a Proxmox VM so that the PCI slot could be used for more NVMe storage?
You can use sr-iov to share the igpu. Can't confirm for this box but I've tested with i9-13900H cpu (in a different system) using Proxmox 8.0 and 8.1.I'd be really interested to know if anyone has managed to get iGPU passthrough working with the onboard XE gfx in a Proxmox VM so that the PCI slot could be used for more NVMe storage?
My assumption would be that they're using the built-in Thunderbolt 4/USB4 controllers on the processor, so yes, it should.I'm really excited about this system and went ahead and ordered one. The question I would like to see answered is about the Thunderbolt. In the video, Patrick mentioned support for Thunderbolt 3. Is that only for display output? What about the possibility of an eGPU. Could I connect a thunderbolt 3 enclosure with a 4090 to this system?
I assume I'll be able to select P vs E core in CPU affinity, if I decide to have some small VMs running on E-Cores to keep P-cores for other heavy workloads?Or keep all cores enabled, using the following flags:
ignoreMsrFaults=TRUE
cpuUniformityHardCheckPanic=FALSE
You can add them on boot time during install/first time, then add it later into your ESXi via GUI/esxcli (such as "esxcli system settings kernel set -s ignoreMsrFaults -v TRUE"). Keep in mind you will loose HT on your P-cores, so figure what makes more sense: higher core count but slower cores, or smaller core count but with faster HT. HT isn't recommended by VMWare anyway, but neither are these small CPUs, so ¯\_ (ツ)_/¯
In my experience, even with commands mentioned by @HQuest you will still get PSOD. Only way I managed to get ESXI stable over long periods of time is with Ecores disabled.I assume I'll be able to select P vs E core in CPU affinity, if I decide to have some small VMs running on E-Cores to keep P-cores for other heavy workloads?
That's a good reason for me to wait a bit till someone confirms ESXi. What's the most prowerful model with P-cores only? 12500T, I think? I doubt minisforum will go 2 gen back.In my experience, even with commands mentioned by @HQuest you will still get PSOD. Only way I managed to get ESXI stable over long periods of time is with Ecores disabled.
It would probably work, but why?I'm really excited about this system and went ahead and ordered one. The question I would like to see answered is about the Thunderbolt. In the video, Patrick mentioned support for Thunderbolt 3. Is that only for display output? What about the possibility of an eGPU. Could I connect a thunderbolt 3 enclosure with a 4090 to this system?
I have the NPB6 barebone and it runs 96Gb DDR5 @4800 just fine, uptime is over 3 months now.If/when the Ryzen version of this design is released (MS-02) I would probably use that or install a Sonnet McFiver adapter (or something similar) and see if it works in one of those single slot minis.
McFiver (Dual M.2 NVMe SSD slots • 10GbE • Two 10Gbps USB-C ports)
Multifunction PCIe card with dual M.2 NVMe SSD slots, 10GbE port, and two USB-C 10Gbps ports. For Mac, PC, and Linux.www.sonnetstore.com
If Minis Forum decides to drag their collective feet on the BD790i I will wait on the MS-02.
I would much rather have the MS-02 with the 7945HX 16c/32t and use the AMD EPP for power management instead of using Intel's e-cores.
For those wondering why Minis Forum removes the barebones option, the #1 issue they deal with is people trying to install RAM that is clocked way higher or weirder than the BIOS can train for. So the units don't boot or throw an error. So customers either complain or return the units. Being a somewhat low-budget company, it would be impossible for them to certify for RAM that is off the reservation. So those of you who buy RAM from "SuperBulldog Sonic XR" and their "Spike" Series from a fab in no name province, look elsewhere perhaps.
So use stock RAM and stock timings bundled from Minis Forum (or your own) as much as possible to certify your build before you get into the overclock orbit.
I have one of these and was hoping to do a roundup / video in September before the move. I showed @WillTaillac that and he was like you MUST do a video on this. I have all the cards on our "to do" shelf for that roundup/ video.If/when the Ryzen version of this design is released (MS-02) I would probably use that or install a Sonnet McFiver adapter (or something similar) and see if it works in one of those single slot minis.
McFiver (Dual M.2 NVMe SSD slots • 10GbE • Two 10Gbps USB-C ports)
Multifunction PCIe card with dual M.2 NVMe SSD slots, 10GbE port, and two USB-C 10Gbps ports. For Mac, PC, and Linux.www.sonnetstore.com
If Minis Forum decides to drag their collective feet on the BD790i I will wait on the MS-02.